The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) contended before the court that since the governor refused to grant sanction, and it has no material to prosecute Chavan, the agency hould be allowed to discharge Chavan from the case.

Chavan was charged with providing additional FSI to the Adarsh Soiety allegedly in return for flats for his relations in the posh building in south Mumbai.

The CBI said that during his tenure as the state revenue minister, Chavan granted approval for permitting 40 percent of the total flats to civilians though the Adarsh Society was meant to house Kargil widows, war heroes and defence personnel.

Chavan resigned as chief minister after the Adarsh Society scam was exposed in 2010 and was replaced by Prithviraj Chavan.

The 31-storeyed Adarsh Society building stands on a prime piece of land in Colaba, south Mumbai. Top politicians and bureaucrats were accused of nexus to bypass rules and corner the posh flats at cheap rates in the Society.

In January 2011, the Maharashtra government appointed a two-member commission headed by retired high court judge, Justice J.A. Patil, and former state chief secretary P.A. Subramanian to probe the entire issue.

In April 2013, the commission submitted its final report after examining 182 witnesses, including four former chief ministers – Ashok Chavan, Vilasrao Deshmukh (who has since died), Sushilkumar Shinde and Shivajirao Patil-Nilangekar, two former ministers Rajesh Tope and Sunil Tatkare, besides a dozen top bureaucrats to probe various alleged illegalities in the Adarsh Society.